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Crossref is a nonprofit association of approximately 19,000 voting members made up of 6,000 societies and publishers, including both commercial and nonprofit organizations, 6,500 academic and research institutions, research funders, museums, repositories, government agencies and NGOs.
The site hosts public metadata releases from Crossref which contain over 120+ million metadata records for scholarly work, each with a DOI.This was done so to allow the community to work with the entire database programmatically instead of using their API.
A digital object identifier (DOI) is a unique persistent identifier to a published work, similar in concept to an ISBN. Wikipedia supports the use of DOI to link to published content. Where a journal source has a DOI, it is good practice to use it, in the same way as it is good practice to use ISBN references for book sources.
A DOI is a type of Handle System handle, which takes the form of a character string divided into two parts, a prefix and a suffix, separated by a slash.. prefix/suffix. The prefix identifies the registrant of the identifier and the suffix is chosen by the registrant and identifies the specific object associated with that DOI.
The citations are stored in Crossref and are made available through the Crossref REST API. They are also available from the OpenCitations Corpus, a database that harvests citation data from Crossref and other sources. [9] The data are considered by those involved in the Initiative to be in the public domain, and so a CC0 licence is used. [5]
DOI or Doi most commonly refers to: Declaration of Independence, a document to be independent from another country; Digital object identifier, an international standard for document identification; United States Department of the Interior, an executive department of the U.S. government; It may also refer to:
In October 2015, DataCite, Crossref and ORCID announced that the former organisations would update ORCID records, "when an ORCID identifier is found in newly registered DOI names". [57] [58] Some ORCID data may also be retrieved as RDF/XML, RDF Turtle, XML or JSON. [59] [60] ORCID uses GitHub as its code repository. [61]
These are collected in Category:CS1 maint: DOI inactive. This may represent: An incorrectly specified DOI. In this case, the DOI in question should be corrected. A DOI awaiting entry into the Handle System system. In this case, the DOI will soon be active, and a bot will remove the doi-broken-date parameter next time it checks the transcluding ...